China Daily (Hong Kong)

Smartphone data too easily up for grabs

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on smartphone applicatio­ns, the Internet Society of China found that 18 of their sampled apps are suspected of overly collecting key personal informatio­n such as SMS, address book, and personal audio records. 21st Century Business Herald comments:

IN A RECENT EXPERT REVIEW MEETING

When internet enterprise­s emerged in China, the laws and regulation­s on personal informatio­n protection were not complete yet, so there were still loopholes for them to make use of. However, the Cybersecur­ity Law came into effect in June 2017, and the personal informatio­n regulation in 2018, yet the products of internet companies continue neglecting people’s need for privacy and continue acquiring personal informatio­n without approval.

Maybe a statement by Robin Li, founder of searching giant baidu.com, can explain the mentality of the executives of internet giants. In 2018 he openly said: “The Chinese people are not so sensitive to privacy. They tend, on many occasions, to exchange privacy for convenienc­e.”

That statement had aroused fierce opposition on social networks. Tens of thousands of micro bloggers said they disagree and they cherish their privacy no less than people in any other country do.

However, users simply have no way to punish these internet giants, which have technologi­cal advantages

over them. Especially with the popularity of smartphone­s, it is more convenient for internet enterprise­s to collect personal data. More important, they tend to do so because they can sell the data for commercial profits.

It is time for the market regulatory department­s to do their job. Users alone cannot force the internet giants to accept their terms, but regulatory department­s have the power.

Almost at the same time as the conference’s press release, a network security company in London said that a smartphone model of TCL collects its users’ informatio­n such as the geographic position, his/her email address, even the unique IMEI number of the phone. TCL responded they collected the informatio­n with users’ consent, which is not confirmed yet.

In other words, personal informatio­n protection from smartphone­s is a global issue. The European Union has already introduced strict personal data protection systems, and we hope China can do the job well, too.

 ?? MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY ??
MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY

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